14 THE OSHAWA TIMES, Tuesday, October 16, 1962 WORLD SERIES FACTS, FIGURES Haller; Terry and Howard. W- Terry, L-Sanford. Hrs: SF- Pa- gan, Nyk Tresh. . Sixth game, Monday, Oct. 15: Ford, Coates (5), Bridges (8) and Howard; Pierce and Bailey. WPierce, LFord. Hr: yk Maris, Remaining Schedule Tuesday, Oct. 16 -- Seventh game at San Francisco. ncfal Figures Sixth Game Attendance--43,948, Net receipts--$356,545.04 Commissioner's share -- $53, UAW Hockey League Off To Fine Start The UAW Hockey League spt MERCHANTS 3. Merchants: Bannon (Burke) ps! to Pd Bent i 7 "2 re bore ge BAKERS No Penalties when s 'ony's e second game saw |asi Refreshments 3-0, : year's finalists battling it out in|SECOND PERIOD Bad Boy's Woods opened the|a grudge match. The champions,| 4 Bakers: Ford scoring in the first period when| r Vending, trouni the| 5. Bakers: Tindle he slipped a shot behind thejlast year runnerups, Oshawa} (Ford, Gibson) Tony's netminder to give them/Merchants, 11-5, 6. Merchants; Burke a 1-0 lead at the end of the first} In a mediocre first period (Sneddon, Hall) min the second period Bad coae outs iy nage one| 7 bakers: Tindal Boys] chan only manage one. 81,76, clinched the contest. with twol Ford and Milton got the pair for| Penalties -- Sargeant, Burke lati Le , h _.|g0als. Brown go one|Bakers. Bannon kept the Mer| THIRD PERIO! area ague's share --/ith assists going to Myles andl chants in 'contention When' be 8 > ea American League's share --|@#udet. Myles fired the second|scored the last goal of the| " (Hall) $75,765.82 one in on a passing play from| period. San Francisco' club's share---| McPhee and Brown to end the] The second period saw each) 9 Baker: Woodcock $75,765.82 scoring. team trade a pair of goals each.| (Ford, Davis) New York club's share--$75,-| pisT PERIOD In the second period Bakers|19- Baker: Wills 765.82. 1. Bad Boy: Woods per pulled away from the G Six-Game Totals (Hill, Marshall) erchants when they counted/11. Baker: Wills Attendance--332,916. Penalties -- Bryant. three goals to the loser's single. (Woodcock) Net receipts--$2,522,346.18 The third frame saw the|12, Baker: Milton Commissioner's share ---|SECOND PERIOD ame bust wide open when the (Davis) 2, Bad Boy: Brown 13. Merchants: Eno 14. Baker: Konorowski (Wills) 15. Merchants: Hall $378,351.90 aker team ran roughshod for a } te fred Gaudet) 3. Bad Boy: Myles | (Burke) { \ | By THE ASSOCIATED PRESS WwW L Pet. New York (AL) 3 3 .500 San Fran. (NL) 3 3 .500 First game, Oct. 4: New York - 6110 San Fran 011 000000- 2100 Ford and Howard; O'Dell, Larsen (8) Miller (9) and iw Orsino (9). W-Ford. L- O'Dell. HR: NYk-Boyer Second game, Friday, Oct. 5: New York 0600000000- 6 31 San Fran. 10000010x- 2 60 Terry, Daley (8) and Berra; Sanford and Haller. W-Sanford. L-Terry. Hr: SF-McCovey Third game, Sunday, Oct. 7: " San Fran, 00 000 002- 2 43 New York 00000030x- 3 91 Pierce, Larsen (7) Bolin (8) and Bailey; Staffod and How- ard. W-Stafford, L-Pierce. Hr: SF-Bailey. ' Fourth game, Monday, Oct. San Fran. 020000401- 7 91 New York 000002001- 3 91 Marichal, Bolin (5), Larsen (6), O'Dell (7) and Haller; Ford, Coates (7), Bridges (7) and Howard. W - Larsen. L- Coates. Hrs: SF- Haller, Hiller. Fifth game, Wednesday, Oct. 10: 001 010 001- 3 82 000 101 03x- 5 60 Thursday, 200 000 just gloved the ball and Mays hits the Candlestick Park turf, to make sure he doesn't spoil the catch. --(AP Wirephoto) THE BOX SCORE SAN FRANCISCO (AP)--The box score of the sixth game of the 1962 World Series: New York AB R HRBI Kubek ss 1 Rich'son 2b Tresh If Mantle cf place in the 9th inning yester- day as both ran hard for N.Y. Yankee Tom Tresh's fly to left-centre, Alou has ing-slide, putting on the brakes to keep from collid- ing with Giants' left-fielder Matty Alou, This action took GOING DOWN! San Fran- cisco centre-fielder Willie Mays slides right out from underneath his hat, as he delibehrately goes into a fall- Whitey Ford's Throw In Wrong Direction Gets Giants On Way %:: sharing the record for most Skowron 1b series defeats--five. a 3b Ford contributed to his own cee downfall in the fourth inning. aLopez p After Felipe Alou's one-out sin- Bridges p gle and a walk to Willie Mays, Totals he tried to execute the Yankes' San Fran well - drilled pickoff play at Kuenn Te scond base, which has ruined yy 'Alou If many an opposition rally over Hiller 2b the season, But this time it went F. Alou rf awey. Mays cf THROW GOES WILD Cepeda 1b As Whitey wheeled for the Davenport 3b throw, he appeared to hesitate Bailey c as ve ioe Alou chawer te the Pierce i ag than he anticipated. The ball squirted out of his hand Totals 33 .5 10 ...4 .27 10 and sailed past second-baseman aF lied out for Coates in 8th. Bobby Richardson into the out- New York 000 010 010--2 field. By the time it was re- San Fran 000 320 00x--5 covered, Alou had scored and oppo rs yer, Ford, Davenport. Dp- Mays was on third. Kubek, Richardson and Skow- games only) -- $863,281.71, answered with three to leave the National League's share --' score at 11-5. Penalties -- Lodge. THIRD PERIOD $320,178.11 , es FIRST PERIOD American League's share %. Bakers; Ford No Scoring Penalties --' Gaudet, Players' share (First four total of six goals. The Merchants (McPhee, Brown) 16. Baker: Gibson $320,178.11. San Francisco club's share-- (Gibson $320,178.12 New York club's share -- $320,178.14. SPORTS CALENDAR TODAY FOOTBALL Lakeshore COSSA Junior League -- Ajax at Courtice, 3.15 p.m. and Whitby Henry at Bow- manville, 3.30 p.m. y WEDNESDAY .. .«. FOOTBALL Oshawa Secondary Schools unior League -- McLaughlin vs O'Neill, at Alexandra Park, 4,00 p.m. SOCCER Howard Travel Tournament-- (Semi-Finals) -- Oshawa Uk- rainia vs Oshawa Polonia, at Kinsmen Civic Memorial Sta- dium, 8.00 p.m, (Ford, Tindall) Penalties -- Goulding, Harmen and Johnson. Oshawa Tony's {gion | Blank Black's For 2nd Win When Oshawa Tony's signed|and left a total of 10 runners Bev Smith, Normie Bagnell|stranded. Either Bey Smith or and Andy Anderson to their/the fine Oshawa defence slam- mound staff, there wasn't any|med the door when Black's doubt that the Motor Cit y/started for a rally. 'entry had the best pitching in) OSHAWA TONY'S -- Oldfield, the Beaches Major Fastball|ss; R. Simcoe, 3b; Piontek, cf; League. Etcher, 1b; Price, 2b; Booth, c; Last night at Kew Beach,/Hill, rf; Simcoe, rf; and fore A -- --_ os Smith, .p. pitching performance by Bev) EDDIE BLACK'S -- McLean, Smith, in shutting out Eddie/2b; Waters, 1b; Galand, 8s; Black's 3-0. Hopper, rf; Hawkes, 3b; Van porting 3 lead ta the teak ot Lan ah tcl oe: OO manding 2-0 lea If; and Zabatiuk, five finals. Earlier in the series, madi 4 Andy Anderson worked 13 score- less frames, thus meaning 'the ) 2. Bakers: Milton (Wills) PO A|San Fran, New York Tie For First In Dart League Results -- Storie 3, South- mead No. 2, 2; Woodview No. 1,3, Rundle No. 1, 2; Wood- view No. 2 3, Southmead No. 1, 2; North Oshawa 3, Wood- view No. 3, 2 and Fernhill 5, Rundle No. 2, 0. Doubles -- B. Cole, Don Wil- liams 3, B. Kitchen 3, A. Muir, V. Graves 2, M. Muir, B. Lay- coe 2, E. Major, W. Dowe, N. Pullen 2, D. Rae, T. Rae, H. Fayle 4, N.. Nicholishen, J. J Carlson, F. Parsons 3, John Wyatt 3, G. Bryant, T. Twine, O. Twine, B. Ross, J. Houston 2, For Officials In Basketball The Oshawa and District Board of Approved Basketball Officials will hold their first meeting of the 1962-63 season this evening, Tuesday, Oct. 16 at 9 p.m., Simcoe Hall on Fisher street. Any person interested in be- coming an official should be present for this meeting. Rule and case books will be given out along with a study session which will be conducted by a member of the board. A Junior Officials' Board is to be formed in the near future and any boy that is interested in becoming a member is asked But records mean little to this comeback Giant bunch, who were written off after their "June swoon." From the brink of disaster, they closed a four- game cap on Los Angeles Dod- gers in the final week of the Na. tional League season, then pulled out the pennant in the ninth inning of the third layoff game. One down three differ- ent times in this joust with the Yankees, they bounced back three times -- the third time Monday when Billy Pierce and Orlando Cepeda led them to a 5-2 victory that snapped Whitey Ford's five-game series winning streak. Pierce, an old American Leaguer, won his first series game with a three-hitter for his 13th consecutive victory at Can- By JACK HAND SAN FRANCISCO (AP)-- After 13 days, 6,000 miles of jet travel and six ball games, San Francisco Giants and New York Rankees are all even again go- ing into today's seventh and fi- nal World Series game. And for the third time in the rain - delayed marathon, it will be Jack Sanford of the Giants facing Ralph Terry of the Yanks. Sanford (24-7) shut out the Yanks with three hits and beat Terry (23-12) in the sec- ond series game, 2-0. Terry edged Sanford 5-3 in the fifth game, 5-3, when rookie Tom Tresh broke a 2-2 tie with a three - run homer in the eighth inning. The Giants have not won a series from the Yankees since > my CO, Pe PRORBDSOH owe. coh. he Soo SoKLHHoRrDwocccoorogHoges SOSH eL_NN or RwcocooHoQHogsH a: SSoHMNMoH oCoomNoCCOSOOQHS SCS Si » He ZOO, mewOmoococoom ool - SrHomHSCSROSOPNOSSCONOHSOSCOURA B. Crawford, P. Crawford 2, K. Snodden 3, R. Cornish 2, G. Thompson, B. Thompson, Jean Craighead,, Ralph Hopson, Jack Craighead, Ruth Hopson, B. Clark 2, D. Moss 4 and A. ' REE. 200 001 000--3 6 1 000 000 000--0 5 0 Tony's Black's 1922, In six Series meetings, the Yanks hold a 4-2 edge, winning in 1923, 1936, 1937 and 1951. The Giants took the first two--in 1921 and 1922. In all, the Yanks have a 19-7 series record against all competition while the Giants Cepeda's double and Jim Dav- ron; Howard and Kubek; Daven- dlestick Park, and Cepeda awoke from an 0-for-12 hitting slump. He had three hits--a double and two singles--drove in two runs and scored one: The defeat left Ford, top winner in World Series history with 10, "SPORTS MENU i By Geo. H. Campbell SPORTS EDITOR "Everything From Soup To Nuts' enport's single produced two more runs before the Giants were retired. A home run by Roger Maris, the first hit off Pierce, gave the Yankees a run in the top of the fifth inning but the Giants bounced back for two more in their half on singles by Harvey Kuenn, Chuck Hiller, Alou and Cepeda. That finished Ford and the Giants were held scoreless the rest of the way by Jim Coates and Marshall Bridges. But Pierce gave up only one more run when Tony Kubek singled home Clete - Boyer, who had doubled, in the eighth. ALMOST -- but not quite! Oshawa Scugog Cleaners came within one inning of wrapping up an Ontario champion- ship, in the Provincial Women's Softball Union Junior "A" finals, here at Alexandra Park last night. They trailed 4-1 going into the bottom of the 8th inning, staged a five-run rally to lead 6-4 and then in the top of the 9th, "the roof fell in" as Hiscock Comets staged a seven-run parade and won the game 11-6 While it was a tough break to be within three "outs" of a provincial title, in all fairness, it should be re- membered that the Oshawa gals had a similar break in To- ronto on Saturday night, when they scored seven runs in one inning, also aided greatly by errors -- to win the first. game of the series 7-3. Now the final series goes to the third and deciding game, but either the Oshawa management neglected to tell us when and where the big on will be played, or per- haps it has not yet been decided, : ¢. 2.2 TONY'S blanked Eddie Black's 3-0 last night at Kew Gar- Gardens behind a steady pitching perfor turned in by Smith -- the only pitcher the Oshawa club had available. Smith twice had the bases loaded, once with only one out, but Smith and his mates combined to hold them off. That gives Tony's two wins in this 3-out-of-5 title set. The second game was a 13-inning scoreless draw. They are scheduled to go back at it on Wednesday night, and Friday, if necessary, with the Oshawa team anxious to clean it up.as soon as possi- ble and claim the Beaches League crown. e 2 4 THE WORLD SERIES will be decided today, weather permitting, and manager Alvin Dark of the San Francisco Giants is entitled to win it. If Giants succeed, they'll go down in baseball annals as one of the great cinderella teams of all times and because of this, we'd like to.see 'em make it. They trailed L.A. Dodgers by four games with only a week left in the schedule -- they won the game that tied the league race, on the final day, with a'homer. Then they had to go the full three-game limit to beat the Dodgers in the playoff -- in fact, they did it in the 9th inning of the deciding game. Now they've pushed the New York Yankees to the full seven-game limit in the World Series, They've played a whole, extra-long season to wind up deciding the world's championship in a sudden-death game. Away back in the last weekend of the schedule, manager Dark laughingly said his Giants had 14 more games to play before they could 'go fishing". It wasn't such a joke either, in fact, it was a fair bit of crystal-gazing, because it needed a playoff and a three- game set at that, plus a full World Series to make the total of 14 -- but today will be the 14th game, They may not burn Candlestick Park at both ends, if they do triumph this efternoon, but there'll certainly be a few kingsize bonfires on the street-corners of Ol' Frisco tonight. se 5 5 WHITEY FORD'S wrong-way throw was the turning point. Both Bobby Richardson of Yankees and Harvey Kuenn of Giants, in the role of sports scribes for this series, pin- point this as the key play. With runners (good runners, too) on first and second, Ford signdlle dthat he'd try the pick- oft play on Felipe Alou, at 2nd. Whitey whirled and started his throw and then (as he said after) realized that this time Alou had not taken very much of a lead, so Whitey tried to check his throw, but the ball got away, sailed out into centre-field and Alou sprinted to the plate, while Willie Mays went to third base. Then Cepeda belted one, a double, and Davenport followed with a single, to make it a three-run rally. Giants were away and they never looked back. The Giants finally hung a defeat on Whitey Ford, deserved it, too, for they collected 19 hits -- but let's not forget also that the Yankee plate-power was hushed to a mere three hits, their first a homer by Roger Maris. And the gent that did that job was former Chicago White Sox ace, Billy Pierce -- who yesterday added to his perfect season at Candlestick Park -- wot one single snuff of the wick, in his home park. Cepeda's outburst got him a place in the starting lineup for today's seventh game, although he has been riding the bench lately against right - handed pitching. Willie McCovey, who usually replaces Cepeda at first base, will be in left field in place of Kuenn, and Tom Haller will take over for catcher Ed Bailey. Haller always catches when Sanford pitches. The Yankees Plan no lineup changes. as hope we get our hitters going," said Houk. as for his pitchers, Houk said it would be Terry at the start and "the other 10 guys in the bullpen." The weatherman promised fair weather with the tempera- ture in the mid-70s, After three days of rain, the outfield was soggy but playable Monday. port, Hiller and Cepeda, LoB- New York (A) 3, San Francisco (N) 5. 2B-Cepeda, Boyer. HR-Maris. SB-Mays. Ford (1) Coates Bridges Pierce (w) Bb--Ford 1 (Mays), Pierce 2 (Boyer, Maris). So-Ford 3 (Da- venport, Bailey 2), Coates 2 (Bailey, Pagan), Pierce 2 (Ford, Maris). U-Berry (A) Piate, Lan- des (N) first base, Nonochick (A) second base, Barlick (N) third base, Burkhart (N) left field, Soar (A) right field. T-2:00. A-43,948. ' REMEMBER WHEN... ? By THE CANADIAN PRESS Connie Mack, the shrewd manager of the Philadel- phia Athletics, bought Bob (Lefty) Grove, ace pitcher of the then International League Baltimore Orioles, for $100,600 cash 38 years ago today. The southpaw was with the Athletics until he was traded to Boston Red Sox at the end of the 1933 season in which he was the American League cham- pion pitcher for a fourth time, including three in a row 1929-31. With Boston, ha the honor again in Pelow 2. High 3 Darts -- Ralph Hop- son 100,.T. Twine 100 and L. Shobbrook 125. Baseball 1 Inning--B. Laycoe 5, N. Pullen 5, D. Donald 5, H. Fayle 5, P. Parsons 5 and Ruth Hopson 6. Standing -- Fernhill 7, Wood- view No. 2, 7; Rundle No. 1, 6; North Oshawa 6, Storie 6, Rundle No. 2, 5; Woodview No. 4; Southmead No. 2, 4; Tony's pitching has been shoot- ing "gooseeggs" at Black's for SOFTBALL the past 22 innings. Toronto Beaches Major Fast- ball League -- (Championship|, Tomorrow night Tony's will Finals) -- Eddie Black's vs Osh-|be gunning for their third. awa Tony's, at Kew Gardens, straight victory in Toronto. m.* f.|Manager Frank Foley and dl Ly 1 Ora ee coach Sammy Stark will prob- ably send veteran Normie Bag- BASEBALL nell to the mound, Oshawa Legion Minor Base-|/STRIKE EARLIER ball Association Annual Ban- Southmead No, 1, 2. er eceaag Suns on tee ' in the opening frame on quet, at Legion Hall, 6.30 p.m. solid hits, which they collected FINALS ALL EVEN In a see-saw playoff game filled with tension and as a re- sult, governed by errors, Osh- awa Scugog Cleaners ' Junior girls softball team scored five runs in the 8th inning here last night, to have the 1962 Ontario PWSU- championship _ within their grasp, only to lose the game 11-6 when Hiscock Comets scored seven runs in the top of the 9th inning. With the series now tied, the PWSU Junior "A" title round will now move into a third and deciding game, time and place to be announced, Marilyn Schultz pitched the game for Oshawa with Lil Jovanovich starting for To- By JACK SULLIVAN Canadian Press Sports Editor HAMILTON (CP)--Joe Zuger, a steel mills truck driver from Homestead, Pa., watched his first Canadian professional foot- ball game here Monday night. He couldn't have chosen a bei- ter time. He kept his eyes peeled on a young blonde Hamilton Tiger- Cat quarterback wearing a sweater with the big numeral "9" on it. The wearer was his son, Joe Jr., who came up with probably the greatest exhibition of passing the Canadian pro game has known. Young Joe pitched eight touchdown passes, a record in this country, as the Tiger-Cats destroyed Saskatchewan 'Rough- riders 67-21 in the' final East- West interlocking game of the season. It was the first starting as- signment for the 22-year-old who does industrial painting on the side, and he left the Rough- riders shattered and torn, The Roughies, who earlier had beaten Toronto Argonauts, Mont- real Alouettes and Ottawa Rough Riders. in East-West in- terlocking games, didn't know what had hit them. CROWD IN FRENZY Zuger, behind a great offen- sive line and with receivers who appeared to be using fishooks for hands, sent the crowd of about 19,000 into a frenzy in the first 20 minutes. The Tiger-Cats had the ball five times is: that Ti-Cats No Doubt Want Zuger Sr. Attend All Games ger, a six-foottwo graduate of Arizona State, connected touchdown passes. . "He has real good native abil- ity," applauded Trimble in the Ticat dressing room. "I always thought he was a good kid, but what can you say after this per- formance? He throws that ball right on the button. He makes the receivers look good." There was little doubt about that. Zuger caught end Hal Pat- terson and halfback Garney Henley each with three touch- down throws. He hit Tim Reid and newcomer Dick Easterly, from Minnesota Vikings of the Nationall Football League, with singles. ronto's Hiscock Comets and she stayed around until the Oshawa girls staged their big splurge in the bottom of the 8th inning: Scugog Cleaners scored the first run of the game. After loading the bases in the second inning and failing to score, they picked up the opening tally in the bottom of the fourth frame when Linda Boddy tripled with one out and scored on a sacri- fice by Mary Clough. The Toronto girls were held in check by Schultz for the first M'tive frames but in the sixth, Sandra Campbell d with a Scugog Cleaners Lose Out In 9th off loser Mose Zabatiuk. Barney Oldfield, who is having a great season, and nie Simcoe, hit back-to-back/ singles. Joe Pion- tek fanned and Fred Etcher popped up to halt the rall y temporary but Danny Price} lined out a clean-cut single, scoring a pair of tallies. Ronnie Simcoe was flexing his muscles in the sixth when he smacked a solo four-bagger. Ronnie, having a poor year at the plate, had collected only one other extra-base blow this year. He certainly was a proud person and was mobbed by his team-mates. 6-4 lead, with only one inning to go, for the championship. But it wasn't to be. In the top of the 9th, the homesters crack- ed. Paula Warder opened with a single and Joyce Gilbart also Umpires -- Fred Bilanford, platie and Ken George, bases. to contact "Tim" Nels Simcoe Hall, for further This is your opportun TIME -- YOUR FUTURE IS RCAF Eddie Black's had the bases singled, then Campbell was safe loaded twice but couldn't score on an error by Boddy and the BRIGHT WITH THE / ity to get first hand information about the outstanding career opportunities in the RCAF» DROP IN AND TALK THINGS OVER -- NO OBLIGATION WEDNESDAY, 17 OCTOBER NOON TO 6 P.M. OSHAWA ARMOURIES t--f fail i 4 parade was in full swing. Whelan homered, then Cowley was safe on an error by Para- dise; Jovanovich hit a sacrifice fly and Anne Bilz singled. Ko- laski walked and Warder grounded out for the d out, as Bilz crossed the plate with the 7th run of the inning, to make the score 11-6, Campbell, Whelan, Bilz and Warder each had two hits for the winners while Parker, Boddy and Paradise, with two apiece, had almost all of Osh- awa's total of seven safeties. HISCOCK COMETS -- J. Gil- bart, rf; Campbell, c; Whelan, 2b; Cowley, 1b; L. Gilbart, ss; Jovanovich, p and cf in 8th; Bilz, cf and p in 8th; Kolaski, 3b; Warder, If. SCUGOG CLEANERS -- Sud- dard, c; Schultz, p; Parker, 3b; Germond, 1b; Boddy, 3s; Clough, cf; Lucas, If; Paradise, 2b; March, rf; Pelow, ef, ran in 8th; Crossman, batted in 7th; Vaillancourt, If in 8th. This compact end cosy cot tege featuring the roomy porch is offered et the single. Arlene Whelan was safe on an error by Carol Parker, then Heather Cowley singled and Lynn Gilbert followed with a homer, to make it 4-1. It stayed at this until the bot- tom of the 8th inning when June Suddard opened for Oshawa with a walk. Schultz and Parker both hit safely and then Carol Germond was safe on an error by Bev Kolaski. Linda Boddy followed with a walk, Clough also drew a pass and an error- throw by the catcher, plus an infield out, gave Scugog Clean- ers a total of five runs, for a SHORGAS HEATING & APPLIANCES Industrial and Commercial The established, reliable Ges ler in your area. 31 CELINA ST. (Corner of Athol) 728-9441 He probably could have in- creased this output but Trimble inserted Canadian Frank Cosen-. tino in the quarterback slot a few times and Cosentino re- sponded by throwing touchdown strikes to Easterly and Henley. ALSO ON PASSES And, just to complete this night of what some fans might call basketball on cleats, the Roughriders scored their three touchdowns on passes from Bob Ptacek, who took a thunderous beating from the hard-charging Ticat defensive line, Ptacek con- nected on scoring throws to Ray Purdin, Jack Gotta and Dale West. The triumph gave the Ticats 13 points, one ahead of Ottawa, five in front of Montreal and seven ahead of Toronto. It also assured the Tiger-Cats of a play- space and on each occasion Zu- off berth at the windup of the 14-game schedule. CANNEL COAL! 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